Difference between revisions of "Gnosticism" - New World Encyclopedia

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===Kabbalism===
 
===Kabbalism===
The Jewish mystical tradition known as the [[kabbalah]] represents a vast mystical literature including many gnostic concepts.
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[[Image:Sefirot.png|thumb|A diagram of the ten "Sefirot," or divine emanations.]]
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The Jewish mystical tradition known as the [[kabbalah]] represents a vast mystical literature including many gnostic concepts. Like other gnostics, kabbalists speak God as "the infinite", "endless", or "that which has no limits," using the Hebrew term ''Ein Sof'' (אין סוף). They also speak of a series divine emanations originating from the Ein Sof. Like other gnostics, kabbalists often affirm that kabbalistic knowledge was revealed to ancient authorities (such as Adam and Abraham) and passed down through the ages. Historically, there is evidence of kabbalistic discussion among the Talmudic rabbis as early as second and third centuries.
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The most important kabbalistic texts appear in the medieval period, the most important being the [[Bahir]] (The Brightness) and the [[Zohar]] (The Book of Splendor), both of which first appeared in the 12th century. In the 16th century, the messianic kabbalistic teachings of [[Isaac Luria]] and his disciples gained wide appeal. In the 17th century Jews throughout Europe and the Middle East placed their hopes in the mystical teacher Shabbetai Zevi as the Messiah. Thereafter, kabbalism was looked on with suspicion by many rabbis, who warned of its potential for superstition and error. Recently, kabbalism has experienced a resurgence in orthodox Jewish circles, and has also found popularity among secular Jews. It has also gained interest among gentiles because of its flexibility and accordance with certain New Age ideas.
  
 
==Gnosticism and Christianty==   
 
==Gnosticism and Christianty==   

Revision as of 16:41, 8 August 2006

File:Gnostic-Circle.gif
The "Gnostic Circle" is a modern creation, but is based in part on ancient gnostic traditions.

Gnosticism is a general term describing various mystically oriented groups and their teachings, which were most prominent in the first few centuries C.E.. It is also applied to later and modern revivals of these teachings. The term gnosticism comes from the Greek word for knowledge, gnosis (γνώσις), referring esoteric consciousness, a key to transcendent understanding, self-realization, and/or unity with God.

The origins of gnosticism are controversial. Some scholars believe it to be of Eastern origin because of its similarities to Buddhist ideas of englightenment, while others believe it have Mesopotamian, Hellenistic, or even Jewish roots. Gnostic groups became popular around the same time and often in the same places that Christianity did. Indeed, gnosticism was widespread within the early Christian church until the gnostics were expelled in the second and third centuries. The response of othodoxy to gnosticism singificantly defined the evolution of Christian doctrine and church order. After gnsotic and orthodox Christianity parted, nostic Christianity continued as a separate movement in some areas for centuries.

Christian gnostic groups portrayed Jesus as the greatest of gnostic teachers, and a number of early gnostic ideas seem to have been adopted into orthodox Christianity. Gnosticism was one of the first doctrines to be specifically declared a heresy. Gnostic movements both within and outside of the Christian chruch have often been persecuted as a result. Gnostic groups have also suffered under Islamic regimes. Gnosticism has reappeared in various forms throughout history and into the contemporary era.

Sources

File:Nag-Hamadi-Codex.jpg
One of the gnostic codices found at Nag Hammadi.

There are two main historical sources for information on gnosticism: critiques by ancient orthodox Chruch Fathers and the original gnostic works.

Gnostics were prolific producers of sacred literature, and there were considerably more gnostic scriptures written than orthodox ones. However, dure to the Christian policy of destroying heretical books, until the late 19th and the 20th centuries, no early gnostic literature was available except in isolated quotations in the writings of their opponents. Scholars in the 19th century devoted considerable effort to collecting the scattered references in the works of opponents and reassembling the gnostic materials.

Several important finds of gnostic manuscripts have been made since, most importantly the so-called Nag Hammadi library. Although we now possess a large collection of gnostic texts, they are still often difficult to relate to the history of gnosticism, due to the esoteric nature of gnostic teaching and difficulties of identifying which teachers or sects were associated with particular texts.

History

Early Jewish Gnosticism

Some scholars, notably Gershom Scholem, believe that Jewish gnosticism predated its Christian counterpart. There is indeed some evidence of Jewish mysticism in the pre-Christian era. This can be seen for exmaple in the philosophical writings of Philo of Alexandria, the revelations of Ezekiel (which produced a vast quantity of later kabbalistic speculation), the apocalyptic sections of the Book of Daniel, and detailed explanations about the angelic world in the apocyphal Book of Enoch. The latter certainly contributed to gnostic descriptions and names of the archons, aeons, etc. (See "Gnostic Cosmology" below.)

However, the data supporting a specifically gnostic Jewish worldview during this period is sparse. In later centuries, the works of the kabbalah clearly indicate a type of Jewish gnosticism. It has yet to be demonstrated, however, that this literature did not evolve out the interaction between gnostics and Jews in Europe during the middle ages, as many believe.

Christian tradition — especially the writings of Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, and Hippolytus — blames the Jewish or Samaritan "sorcerer" Simon Magus as the originator gnosticism. The Church Fathers described him as founding a gnostic sect that practiced antinomianism — the doctrine that moral laws did not apply to one who had attained salvation or enlightenment. According to the Book of Acts, this Simon was simply a magician whose sin was that he wanted to pay money so that he could obtain the power of the Holy Spirit for personal gain. It is impossible to say for certain whether his teachings might have constituted a type of gnosticism, Jewish or otherwise.

Christian Gnosticism

Gnosticism can be viewed as one of the three main branches of early Christianity. The others are are Jewish Christianity, which was practiced by the disciples of Jesus; and Pauline Christianty, which rejected Jewish traditions. The great German biblical historian Adolf von Harnack said that while Paul's teachings represented the hellenization of the original Jewish Christianity, gnosticism represented its "extreme hellenization."

For some time, Pauline Christianity and gnostic Christianity coexisted. Gradually, the teaching of the two groups appears to have become more distinct. Certain of Paul's letters teach concepts in accord with gnostic teaching — such as the existence of a "god of this world" who has blinded unbelievers (2 Cor. 4:4), the superiority of the spiritual man over the man of flesh (Rom. 8:5), and the existence of secret spiritual teachings that could not be shared with Christians who were not yet advanced enough to receive them (1 Cor 3:1-2). So too, the gospels speak of gnostic themes such as Christ as a pre-existent being of light (John 1:3-5), the triumph of light over darkness within the believer (Luke 11:36), and the devil as the ruler of the material world (Luke 4:6). Gnostic teachers made great use both of Paul's letters and the gospels, especially Luke and John.

Later Christian scriptures, however, directly attack gnosticism. For example:

  • I Timothy 1:3-4 says: "Stay there in Ephesus so that you may command certain men not to teach false doctrines any longer nor to devote themselves to myths and endless genealogies." The letter urges Timothy to "Turn away from godless chatter and the opposing ideas of what is falsely called knowledge (gnosis), which some have professed and in so doing have wandered from the faith. (6:20-21)
  • The short Letter of Jude was written to warn of "certain men... who have secretly slipped in among you. They are godless men, who change the grace of our God into a license for immorality..." (1:4) — a probably reference to gnostic teachers who allegedly went so far as to affirm that Christians could dispense with not only the Jewish kosher and circumcision laws, but also the Ten Commandements themselves.

Thus, various gnostic and semi-gnostic sects worked within mainline Christian groups. One such group has been named by contemporary scholars as the "School of Thomas" — those who read the Gospel of Thomas, accepted Jesus as a teacher of mystical truth rather than as a savior who atoned for their sins, and believed the resurrection to be spiritual rather than physical.

An important Christian semi-gnostic leader was Marcion, a mid-second century teacher who gained a signficant following in the church of Rome. Marcion accepted the gnostic proposition that the Hebrew Creator-God was actually the Demiurge described in gnostic literature, and thus a different being from the loving Heavenly Father of Jesus Christ. He proposed that the Old Testament scriptures should be rejected by Christians, while accepting only a shortened version of the Gospel of Luke and the letters of Paul as authoritative.

The church's rejection of Marcionism resulted in three important developments: Christianity's formal accpetance of the Jewish God as identical with the God of Christianity, the adoption of the Hebrew bible, and the creation of lists of authorized Christian scriptures that eventually became the New Testament canon. The church also created creeds and other liturgical formulas to weed out gnostic ideas. For example, the Apostles' Creed specifies that God the Father is the "creator of heaven and earth," thus refuting the gnostic/marcionite idea that the creator of the material world was not God but the Demiurge. It further states that Jesus "suffered" under Pontius Pilate, thus refuting the gnostic idea that Christ did not suffer because he was not tied to his physical body. Furthermore, the creed's affirmation of belief in "the resurrection of the body" refutes the gnostic belief that the resurrection was spiritual, not physical, etc.

Valentinus, Basilides and the Sethians

The second century Christian gnostic teacher of widest renown was Valentinus, who was to found his own school of gnosticism in both Alexandria and Rome. According to Tertullian, Valentinus had been a significant figure in the Roman church at one time. He claimed to have received a revelation directly from the Logos. His human instructor was a certain Theudas, who in turn had supposedly received secret knowledge passed on to him by the Apostle Paul. According to Irenaeus, Valentinus was the author of the Gospel of Truth.

Valentinus lived from about 100–175 C.E. While in Alexandria, where he was born, Valentinus probably would have had contact with another major gnostic teacher, Basilides, and may have been influenced by him. The followers of Basilides can be viewed as forming a distinct sect from the Valentinians, although their views in many ways overlapped.

Valentinian gnosticism flourished throughout the early centuries of the common era, and the group's Christian opponents make its vitality clear. A list or heretics composed in 388 C.E., against whom Emperor Constantine intended legislation, includes the Valentians. Valentinus' students elaborated on the teachings and materials they received from him. Several varieties of their central myth are known. (see "Gnostic Cosmology.")

Valentinian works probably make up a significant part of the Nag Hammadi library, although some analysts identify the collection's "Sethian" literature as coming from a separate gnostic sect. Several other gnostic groups existed as well, although the evidence for them comes mostly from their opponents. For example, "Ophites" is a blanket term refering to various gnostic sects of this period. Included among them were both the Sethians and the Naasseners, the latter supposedly honoring the Demiurge, whom they identified with the serpent of Genesis, as a hero.

Manichaeism

Manichaeism, a gnostic religion that originated in third century Babylon, a province of Persia at the time, eventually reached from North Africa to China. Named after its prophet, Mani, its teachings moved west into Syria, Northern Arabia, Egypt and North Africa, where the future Saint Augustine was a member from 373-382. From Syria it progressed into Palestine, Asia Minor, and Armenia. There is evidence for Manicheans in Rome and Dalmatia in the foruth century, and also in Gaul and Spain. Many of the members of earlier Christian gnostic sects may have drifted into the orbit of Manichaeism. It possessed an organized clergy, liturgies, scriptures, and monasteries.

Manicheanism was attacked by imperial edicts and polemical writings by Augustine and other Christian critics, but the religion remained strong in the western Roman Empire until the sixth century. In the east, Manicheanism was able to bloom more freely. In the early years of the Arab conquest, Manicheanism found followers in Persia and flourished especially in Central Asia, where it had spread through Iran. Here, in 762, Manicheanism became the state religion of the Uigar Empire. It was eventually repressed through the influence of Islam.

Like other gnostic religions, the scriptures of Manichaeism were lost until the modern era. In the early 1900s, German scholars excavated the ancient site of the Manichaean Uigur Kingdom near Turfan, in Chinese Turkestan and uncovered hundreds of pages of lost Manichaean scriptures which are now available in translation.

Medieval Gnosticism

File:Cathars-Expelled.jpg
Cathari expelled from France.

Gnosticism, probably including Manichaeism, exerted an important later influence in the west through the emergence of the Paulicians, Bogomils and Cathari in the middle ages. The Cathari, also called Abigensians, controlled signifcant areas of Sourthern France during the 12th century. Through the Inquisition and the Abligensian Crusade, these gnostic movements were ultimately and ruthlessly stamped out as heresy by the Catholic Church.

Thus gnosticism was finally forced underground. The Knights Templar were accused of gnosticism and other heresies during their later history. Gnostic ideas can be seen to some extent in the works of the Alchemists, Freemasons, Rosicrucians and other secret societies.

Neo-gnostic interpretations of the Holy Grail myth, such as the Da Vinci Code hold that its quest is related to an ancient gnostic tradition based on the Gospel of Philip and the Gospel of Mary (Magdalene) supposedly implying that Magdalene was the mother of Jesus' daughter and that Jesus' lineage survived in the Merovignian kings. Keepers of this secret knowledge included great Renaissance figures such as Da Vinci, Bacon, and others.

See "Modern Gnosticism" for the further history of the western gnostic tradition.

Mandaeanism

A gnostic sect with ancient roots, Mandaeanism is still practised in small numbers, in parts of southern Iraq and the Iranian province of Khuzestan. The name of the group derives from the term: Mandā d-Heyyi which roughly means "Knowledge of Life." Although its exact chronological origins are not known, the group looks to John the Baptist as a central figure and teacher. Frequent ritual immersions and vegetarianism play a important part in Mandaean practice. Unlike Christian gnosticism, Mandaeanism rejects Jesus as teacher of truth, believing him to be false prophet who perverted the teachings of the Baptist.

Significant amounts of early Mandaean scripture survive in the modern era. The primary source text, known as the Genzā Rabbā, and has portions identified by some scholars as being copied as early as the second century C.E.. Also important as the Qolastā, or Canonical Book of Prayer and The Book of John the Baptist. The Mandaeans were serverely repressed under the regime of Saddam Hussein. As of 2006, they were technically a legal religion in Iraq, but reported significant persecution by non-governmental forces, especially Shiite Muslims, who consider them to be pagan infidels rather than "People of the Book.' Many Mandeans have sought exile in Australia.

Kabbalism

A diagram of the ten "Sefirot," or divine emanations.

The Jewish mystical tradition known as the kabbalah represents a vast mystical literature including many gnostic concepts. Like other gnostics, kabbalists speak God as "the infinite", "endless", or "that which has no limits," using the Hebrew term Ein Sof (אין סוף). They also speak of a series divine emanations originating from the Ein Sof. Like other gnostics, kabbalists often affirm that kabbalistic knowledge was revealed to ancient authorities (such as Adam and Abraham) and passed down through the ages. Historically, there is evidence of kabbalistic discussion among the Talmudic rabbis as early as second and third centuries.

The most important kabbalistic texts appear in the medieval period, the most important being the Bahir (The Brightness) and the Zohar (The Book of Splendor), both of which first appeared in the 12th century. In the 16th century, the messianic kabbalistic teachings of Isaac Luria and his disciples gained wide appeal. In the 17th century Jews throughout Europe and the Middle East placed their hopes in the mystical teacher Shabbetai Zevi as the Messiah. Thereafter, kabbalism was looked on with suspicion by many rabbis, who warned of its potential for superstition and error. Recently, kabbalism has experienced a resurgence in orthodox Jewish circles, and has also found popularity among secular Jews. It has also gained interest among gentiles because of its flexibility and accordance with certain New Age ideas.

Gnosticism and Christianty

Many gnostic sects were made up of Christians who embraced mystical theories of the nature of Jesus. The Gospel of Thomas, an early semi-gnostic collection of Jesus' sayings that was apparently widely popular, represents this tendency. In this account, Jesus institutes no sacraments, and his death and resurrection are never mentioned. His role is not to die for mankind's sins, but to impart knowledge to those of his disciples who are able to receive it. "Whoever discovers the interpretation of these sayings," the gospel begins, "will not taste death." Thus it is not by faith in Jesus, but by knowing the true meaning of his teachings, that the believer will enter into eternal life.

While gnosticism was a highly diverse and flexible phenomenon, certain elements can be identified as typifying the movement in its Christian manifestation.

  • Gnostics tended toward a dualistic view in which matter was seen as essentially illusory.
  • Christian gnostics emphasized spiritual knowledge and experience, rather than faith and the sacraments of the church, as the key to salvation or unity with God.
  • They tended to deny the physical resurrection of Jesus, believing this event to be purely spiritual in nature.
  • By the mid-second century, Christian gnostics often believed that the God of the Jews was a different, lower being from the True God, having come into existence through the Fall of Sophia (see "Gnostic Cosmology", below).

Many gnostics, such as the Valentinians, were highly disciplined and ascetic. Others, however, were accused of teaching that gnosis liberates a person from moral constraint. Many believed in a doctrine known as docetism, the teaching that Jesus only appeared to possess a physical body. It was against this doctrine that 2 John 1:7 famously objects when it states:

"Many deceivers, who do not acknowledge Jesus Christ as coming in the flesh, have gone out into the world. Any such person is the deceiver and the antichrist."

Various gnostic groups taught other doctrines which were rejected by the orthodox church, including:

  • that God is androgynous (embracing both masculinity and feminity)
  • that God himself is not a Trinity but a Unity
  • that the Trinity which emerged from God is Father, Mother, and Son
  • that certain disciples (such as Thomas of Mary Magdalene) received special knowledge from Jesus, which withheld from less enlightened disciples such as Peter
  • that women can administer baptsim and act as priests

Some gnostics, in common with such Neoplatonic philosophers as Plotinus, held matter to be evil. However, others believed that matter is not evil in and of itself. Rather, it is a person's identification with matter rather than spirit that leads one astray. Gnostics often taught a doctrine of the "bridal chamber," in which the human soul is reunited with God. In association with this idea, they were accused by orthodox Christians of engaging in licentious sexual rituals. Evidence from gnostic sources regarding this, however, is lacking.


Gnostic Cosmology

By the late second century, the gnostic movement had developed a rather involved cosmology. Although it varied widely and should not oversimplified, a basic outline can be useful for our understanding:

Creation

This kabbalistic depiction of the Ein Sof (limitless God) and its emanations has much in common with the traditional gnostic idea.

The "classical" gnostic mythology posits a sort of prologue to the Judeo-Christian version of creation as described in the Book of Genesis. It speaks of an unknown God, defined as immovable, invisible, intangible, and ineffable. God is seen as being androgynous, both male and female, and "all-containing" or sometimes "the uncontained." God may also be referred to as the Monad, or the first Aeon. In gnosticism, God cannot be accurately described in any positive sense through words; it is more possible to say what God isn't. It is only in experiencing God through gnosis that the Deity can be truly understood — but this, too, defies verbal description.

He did not lack anything, that he might be completed by it; rather he is always completely perfect in light. He is illimitable, since there is no one prior to him to set limits to him. He is unsearchable, since there exists no one prior to him to examine him. He is immeasurable, since there was no one prior to him to measure him. He is invisible, since no one saw him. He is eternal, since he exists eternally. He is ineffable, since no one was able to comprehend him to speak about him. He is unnameable, since there is no one prior to him to give him a name. He is immeasurable light, which is pure, holy, immaculate. He is ineffable, being perfect in incorruptibility. (He is) not in perfection, nor in blessedness, nor in divinity, but he is far superior. He is not corporeal nor is he incorporeal. He is neither large nor is he small. There is no way to say, 'What is his quantity?' or, 'What is his quality?', for no one can know him.

This original God went through a series of emanations, during which its essence is seen as expanding into many successive "generations" of paired male and female beings, called "aeons." Some gnostic texts posit 15-30 such pairs (probably the "endless genealogies" refered to in 2 Timothy, above). These can also be seen as representative of the various attributes of God. Collectively, God and the aeons comprise the sum total of the spiritual universe, known as the Pleroma. One of the first of the aeons — according to one text — was the feminine counterpart of God.

His thought performed a deed and she came forth, namely she who had appeared before him in the shine of his light... the perfect glory in the aeons, the glory of the revelation, she glorified the virginal Spirit and it was she who praised him, because thanks to him, she had come forth. This is the first thought, his image. She became the womb of everything, for it is she who is prior to them all, the Mother-Father, the first man, the holy Spirit, the thrice-male, the thrice-powerful, the thrice-named androgynous one, and the eternal aeon among the invisible ones, and the first to come forth. —Apocryphon of John (?)

In some versions of the myth, another of the first aeons was Christos, or Christ, who was later sent to earth as the savior. In others, Christ appears to embody several of the characteristics of the first aeons. One Valentinian list (the genealogies vary quite significantly) identifies the following generations of aeons:

First generation: Bythos or the Monad (the One)

Second generation: Caen (Power) and Akhana (Love)

Third generation, emanated from Caen and Akhana: Nous (Nus, Mind) and Aletheia (Veritas, Truth)

Fourth generation, emanated from Nous and Aletheia: Sermo (the Word) and Vita (the Life)

Fifth generation, emanated from Sermo and Vita: Anthropos (Humanity) and Ecclesia (Church)

Sixth generation, emanated from Sermo and Vita: Bythios (Profound) and Mixis (Mixture), Ageratos (Never old) and Henosis (Union), Autophyes (Essential nature) and Hedone (Pleasure), Acinetos (Immovable) and Syncrasis (Commixture), Monogenes (Only-begotten) and Macaria (Happiness); emanated from Anthropos and Ecclesia: Paracletus (Comforter) and Pistis (Faith), Patricas (Paternal) and Elpis (Hope), Metricos (Maternal) and Agape (Love), Ainos (Praise) and Synesis (Intelligence), Ecclesiasticus (Son of Ecclesia) and Macariotes (Blessedness), Theletus (Perfect) and Sophia (Wisdom).

At this point in the gnostic cosmology, the universe was still entirely non-material. However, the emanations of God into increasing numbers of aeons led, eventually, to potential instability within the primordial universe. This reached a critical point with the appearance of the aeon most distant from the origin, Sophia (Greek for "wisdom").

Fall

Sophia's distance from the Original One produced a sense of anxiety and fear of losing her life, as well as confusion and longing to return to God. In some versions of the myth, Sophia attempts to surmount the rigid hierarchy of the divine nature, in order to approach close to God. In other versions, she imitates God by performing an emanation of her own. In both cases, this intransigence causes a crisis within the Pleroma, leading to the creation of the Demiurge.

File:Demiurge.jpg
This image of a lion-faced diety from a gnostic gem may be a depction of the Demiurge.

In the Apocryphon of John, the Demiurge is referred to as Yaldabaoth, a "serpent with a lion's head."

"And when she saw (the consequences of) her desire, it changed into a form of a lion-faced serpent. And its eyes were like lightning fires which flash. She cast it away from her, outside that place, that no one of the immortal ones might see it, for she had created it in ignorance. — Apocryphon of John

Sophia hides the Demiurge, but he later escapes. The Demiurge then creates the physical world in which we live. To assist in the completion of his task, the Demiurge spawns a group of entities known collectively as Archons — the demigods and craftsmen of the physical world.

At this point, the events of the gnostic narrative join with the events of Genesis, with the Demiurge and his cohorts fulfilling the role of the Creator and his angels. The Demiurge declares himself to be the only god, and that none exist superior to him. Thus, humankind became trapped a the Demiurge's web of material illusion, cut off from the true God and source of divine light.

Redemption

Regreting her action, Sophia managed to infuse a spiritual spark or pneuma into the Demiurges creation. The savior (who is the Aeon Christos) comes to Sophia and allows her to see the light again. Christos and Sophia, in some version of the myth, work together to reawaken humans to the Truth. While Sophia remains in the Pleroma, Christos descends to earth in the form of the man Jesus to give men the gnosis they need to rescue themselves from the physical world and return to spiritual reality.

Three types of humans responsd differently to Christ's message. These types reflect the three sensations experienced by Sophia:

  • hylics (bound to the matter, the principle of evil)
  • psychics (bound to the soul and partly saved from evil)
  • pneumatics, free to return to the Pleroma if they achieve gnosis

Thus Sophia, despite her negative role in the tragedy of creation, plays a positive role in relation to helping humankind to reawaken from "forgetfulness" into the light of truth. In some cases she is even seen as the spiritual consort or female counterpart of Christ:

The perfect Savior said: "The Son of Man consented with Sophia, his consort, and revealed a great androgynous light. His male name is designated 'Savior, Begetter of All Things'. His female name is designated 'All-Begettress Sophia'. Some call her 'Pistis' (faith). — The Sophia of Jesus

Some gnostics not only rejected the Jewish God as the Demiurge, but consequently reinterpreted biblical stories so that the enemy of this god's tyranny became a hero. Thus, many gnostics regarded the serpent in the Garden of Eden as a messenger of light who could help humanity free itself of the chains of the Demiurge, or Yaldabaoth. In this version of the myth, Sophia gives wisdom to humankind by way of the serpent, opening the way to gnosis. This angered the Demiurge, who believed himself to be the sole creator of the universe and the exclusive ruler of this world.

In some versions of the story, Seth, the third son of Adam, was introduced to the gnostic teachings by both his father and/or his mother, and this knowledge has been preserved throughout the genrations. Several of the gnostic writings discovered at Nag Hammadi take the form of revelations from Seth, Adam, Jesus or one of the disciples.

Modern Gnosticism

Although consistently repressed by the Catholic Church, gnosticism continued to exist in various underground forms. After the Reformation and the advent of religious tolerance in the 17th and 18th centuries, it began to surface again. The Occultism of the 19th century has gnostic elements, for example. However, there has always been a great deal of diversity within gnosticism and modern gnostic doctrines sometimes have little to do with ancient gnosticism.

Blake's "Ancient of Days"
  • William Blake, the nineteenth century Romantic poet and artist, was apparently well-versed in certain doctrines of the gnostics. However, Blake's personal mythology was complex, and the exact relationship between Blake and the gnosticism remains a point of scholarly contention.
  • Jules Doinel "re-established" the Gnostic Church in the modern era. Founded on rediscovered Cathar documents with a heavy influence of Valentinian cosmology, the church, established in the autumn 1890 in Paris, consisted of modified Cathar rituals as sacraments, a clergy that was both male and female, and a close relationship with several esoteric initiatory orders (see link http://www.gnostique.net for more information).
  • Carl Jung and his associate G. R. S. Mead worked on trying to understand and explain the gnostic faith from a psychological standpoint. The Jungian movement spawned wide interest in gnosticism.
  • Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, founder of Theosophy wrote extensively on gnostic ideas' which permeate the various branches of this movement.
  • Samael Aun Weor commented extensively on the Pistis Sophia in his book The Pistis Sophia Unveiled, and founded International Gnostic Movement.
  • In the United States there are several gnostic churches with diverse lineages, one of which is the Ecclesia Gnostica, affiliated with an organization for studies of gnosticism named the Gnostic Society, primarily in Los Angeles.
  • Aleister Crowley's Thelema system is influenced by and bears major features in common with gnosticism.
  • Mar Iohannes of the Apostolic Johannite Church is President of the North American College of Gnostic Bishops, a group dedicated not to dogmatic statements, but to working together to promote gnostic growth. The AJC is a bridge-building Church with traditionally-styles Rites, but Gnostic understanding of those Rites. 'Experiential Knowledge' of the Divine is the final arbiter of Gnosis.
  • Scientology has certain parallels with gnosticism in its emphasis on attaining self-knowledge and attaining the state of being "Clear."
  • Several contemporary Sethian movements emphasize the channeled revelation from the spiritual realm, have developed, with varying degress of connection to the traditional gnostic Sethian tradition.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

Primary sources

Secondary sources

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  • Pagels, Elaine (1979). The Gnostic Gospels. . ISBN 0679724532. (182 pages)
  • Pagels, Elaine (1989). The Johannine Gospel in Gnostic Exegesis. . ISBN 1555403344. (128 pages)
  • Williams,Michael (1996). Rethinking Gnosticism: An Argument for Dismantling a Dubious Category. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691011273.

External links

Ancient Gnosticism

Modern Gnosticism


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